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GUESS WHAT, WORLD! I’M A COLLEGE GRADUATE!
Proudly sporting a degree in Character Animation. Booyaaah!

There’s me eagerly anticipating graduation! I like that at CalArts we can wear whatever we want for graduation… kinda like how we can do whatever we want academically whilst attending (taking all sortsa fun classes across departments, I mean; stylistically, too). Â There was a girl on stilts, a mermaid, and the guy in front of me had a party favor hat.Â We even had fireworks this year! No butterflies were consumed by bats (those who attended last year will remember this).

I thought it would be nice to do a little review of the last 4 years to see just how much of an impact this place has had on me:

14 films (over 23 minutes of animation)

I built a pink, fluffy, interactive cat

Played in two gamelan ensembles

Jumped from two stories onto bouncy castle

Two films played at the Producers’ Shows

Other work screened for Music Tech and Theatre

Grown a true appreciation for homemade food

I opened my EYES to this crazy world!

I feel like a lil’ alien observing a foreign planet everywhereÂ I go

(That means I now take observation to a level I didn’t know existed)

My appreciation for creativity/art has exploded into a happily-varied bookcase

I LEARNED HOW TO THINK– or approach projects with the large and tiny details all equally in mind.

I must say that watching Can We Be Happy Now on a ginormous screen framed by two large Mr. Oscar statues was definitely a highlight that I would have never dreamt of when I got that acceptance letter way back when.

Things I learned at CalArts…

It’s possible to live a ramen-free college life

Design sensibilities can apply to any medium

Coffee, when saved for crunch time, can power one for three days straight

Expect at least a weeks’ worth of technical difficulties for large projects

Never run Arduino’s Serial Monitor without a delay (or you get a brick)

Snuggies for the win

Not to spill tea on a keyboard (during crunch time especially)

Don’t leave your car alone (or its battery dies)

Frozen Yogurt and fudgesicles make lovely meals

Don’t open a fridge that isn’t yours

Hugs make everything better

Bounce and share ideas

Open *all* the doors

yoooooou caaannnn doooooeeeeeeeit!

It’s bizarre– I was just going through my old blog entries from the beginning of CalArts and I don’t think my opinion of the place has really changed much. It is a very exciting place to be, there are lots of opportunities and you will always be surrounded by the most incredibly talented people and teachers. No regrets– that place was fantastic! I’m looking forward to working with everyone now that we’re “out in the world”, or I guess that could be rephrased as “not being required to attend classes”.

I wasn’t taught how to draw as much as how to think– how to design, how to consider story, how all the elements of a film need to compliment each other; how to people-watch, what details to take away… In the end I feel the acute observational skills obtained through attempting to improve my animation has given me the pleasure of enjoying everyone’s little mannerisms, paying attention to what makes their character… Some things I would have viewed in a negative light before CalArts I now have learned to laugh at. Laughing’s good, right?! I do lots of it (along with tea-drinking) and feel great. And way more mentally-satisfied artistically than I did four years ago.

Going into CalArts,Â I didn’t expect quite the diversity I found. It was really easy to get stuck in one mindset, but once you shake yourself free of the cubicles and get out to see a show, you really feel refreshed… Even Friday-night lectures left me that way. I found it was important to not take it for granted and often remember how special a place it was, that all these people were there, together. Working, sharing, eating, drawing, not sleeping… It was a lot of fun!

I feel like that’s me– a happy little Tahnee-plant! (See, it’s black and white striped, that’s the identifying feature). I feel that I’ve learned how to learn. I clearly see where I could improve or discover new aspects of art/filmmaking, and practice what I discover and then keep growing and growing. Each one of those little branches is perhaps waiting to blossom into a full tree trunk… I feel that I’ve been left with a lot of opportunities and know what to do to keep improving. This is all very exciting! I got a really solid planter with good soil and got off to a nice start when in school, and now I’ve got the whole rest of my life to turn into a huge, whimsical, animated happy tree.

Hopefully I can drop little inspiration-seeds into other planters and make more happy animation trees grow!

Same pose, different interpretations.
Kinda bizarre going to do life drawing back at Palomar… it’s been two years since I’ve really been on campus. This model had, during the semester I submitted to CalArts, taken off for Spain. Turns out he’s back to stay in America. I was kinda glad because he’s one of my local favorites.